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Your "blurriness at depth" is more a by product of your aperture setting the nut lens or autofocus. If you have the camera in any manual mode and run the aperture up to a high f stop your background will be very blurry. Now the rage of aperture available is dependent on the lens, but almost never standard lens will give you enough adjustment to get a blurred background. That being said... All lenses or cameras for that matter... When you increases aperture you are making the hole light comes in smaller. So to still get good exposure you need to slow your shutter speed down. This may result in photos where everything is blurred if the person you are photographing or if the camera moves. That's why pros put camera's on tripods and tell you to hold still while they take the picture. I am highly over simplifying this topic, but in short... Yes. It will do it. But you will have to go manual and figure out how to use the camera like a professional would. (Is it YouTube for tutorial videos).
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes you will still get a good depth of field with the kit lens you just have to practice and see how far to put yourself from the subject. The kit lens (the one in the box) is best in day since or you need some lighting at night or buy a lens with a lower aperture like F 1.8. If you don't use the auto focus you can touch the screen and focus where you need to as well... I really like that part of the camera super easy to use.
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